Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary (2002)

Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary (2002)
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Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary is a feature-length interview with 81-year-old Austrian Traudl Junge, who served as Hitler's personal secretary from 1942 to 1945, when she was in her early twenties. She saw Hitler in his everyday life, right up until his final days, and she witnessed, firsthand, the collapse of the Nazi regime. After the war, Junge was "de-Nazified" by Allied forces as part of a program of amnesty for young people. She remained silent about her experiences for nearly 60 years, until she agreed to be interviewed by artist Andre Heller, whose own Jewish father escaped Austria as the Nazis came to power. Heller and documentarian Othmar Schmiderer edited ten hours of interview footage into the 90-minute film, which uses no archival footage, photos, or background music. It's just Junge describing her experiences on camera and occasionally watching the video playback of herself as she describes those experiences. Junge denies any real knowledge or understanding of what the Nazis were doing while she worked for them. She discusses how she was taken in by Hitler, who seemed fatherly and kind. She describes his personality. She goes into harrowing detail about the last days in the bunker. At times, she seems overwhelmed by her sense of shame at her own ignorance and naïveté. Presumably unburdened after decades of guilt, Junge passed away just hours after Blind Spot was shown at the 2002 Berlin Film Festival, where it won the Panorama Audience Prize. The film was also shown at the 2002 Toronto Film Festival, and the 2002 New York Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi

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Director(s):
Othmar SchmidererAndre Heller, (more)
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG
Format(s):
DVD
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Synopsis of Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary

Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary is a feature-length interview with 81-year-old Austrian Traudl Junge, who served as Hitler's personal secretary from 1942 to 1945, when she was in her early twenties. She saw Hitler in his everyday life, right up until his final days, and she witnessed, firsthand, the collapse of the Nazi regime. After the war, Junge was "de-Nazified" by Allied forces as part of a program of amnesty for young people. She remained silent about her experiences for nearly 60 years, until she agreed to be interviewed by artist Andre Heller, whose own Jewish father escaped Austria as the Nazis came to power. Heller and documentarian Othmar Schmiderer edited ten hours of interview footage into the 90-minute film, which uses no archival footage, photos, or background music. It's just Junge describing her experiences on camera and occasionally watching the video playback of herself as she describes those experiences. Junge denies any real knowledge or understanding of what the Nazis were doing while she worked for them. She discusses how she was taken in by Hitler, who seemed fatherly and kind. She describes his personality. She goes into harrowing detail about the last days in the bunker. At times, she seems overwhelmed by her sense of shame at her own ignorance and naïveté. Presumably unburdened after decades of guilt, Junge passed away just hours after Blind Spot was shown at the 2002 Berlin Film Festival, where it won the Panorama Audience Prize. The film was also shown at the 2002 Toronto Film Festival, and the 2002 New York Film Festival. ~ Josh Ralske, Rovi

Theatrical Feature Running Time:
87 mins

Complete Cast of Blind Spot: Hitler's Secretary


Director(s):
Othmar SchmidererAndre Heller
Producer(s):
Daniel KrauszDanny KravszKurt Stocker
Theatrical MPAA Rating:
PG(Adult Situations)
Categories:
DocumentaryIndependent Films
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    Christy N.

    My family is from the remains of WW2 Germany. Because of this I have a fascination with WW2 and all of the events that surround it. Despite all the books I have read and the movies/documentaries I have seen...I have never heard this story. It is almost scary how real of a person Junge paints of Hitler as she describes him and his mannerisms. She recounts the final days in Hitler's bunker with incredible detail. The stories border on bothersome and fascinating. There is nothing visually exciting about this movie. All you see are a few different angles of an elderly woman recounting her young life. There were times I wanted to cry but was in too much awe to do so. (Had the documentary had pictures of the areas described or anything more than just straight sub-titles I would have given this five stars.)

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    Kathleen W.

    Be forewarned that the movie consists exclusively of a single talking head - that of Traudl Junge. No commentary, no archival photos or film. But her story and her reflections are mesmerizing and well worth watching. If you haven't seen it - you MUST see "Downfall," which is obviously based substantial on Junge's rememberence. Even if you think you know it all about Hitler, his final days in "The Bunker," etc. - you'll see them as never before in "Downfall." I'm a VERY tough critic, and I consider "Downfall" the best movie I've seen in the last 5 years.

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    Stanley G.

    An important documentary which one shouldn't miss. Though it presents only a single woman, reflecting on her interaction as a young secretary to Hitler and her responses to occasional questions, the film is quite affecting. A tragedy that this film isn't widely shown, perhaps in high schools, certainly in colleges.

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